Purdy’s Rough Night Won’t Define His Career: 49ers Coach Shanahan Optimistic
Sometimes in life you learn more from failure than from success. According to Kyle Shanahan, that may be the case with Brock Purdy.
The San Francisco 49ers coach was honest in his assessment of the Baltimore Ravens’ collapse on Monday night, specifically Purdy’s play. The young quarterback is off to the worst start of his career, throwing four interceptions in the first three quarters of the game.
He also had zero touchdowns and a 42.6 passer rating, the lowest in 2023. Despite the historically poor performance, Shanahan and the 49ers aren’t worried about Purdy knowing he’s working his way back. “He’s just got to go ahead and treat it like a game,” Kyle Shanahan said Wednesday. “We’ll review the game. He’ll do it alone before I see him. I had time to watch with him yesterday.
I know it’s always tough when you have four picks and no touchdowns, especially when you have four with two minutes left in the third quarter.
But you also study them all, talk to him about why they happened, what happened. “Looking at that game, it won’t be hard for him to bounce back and get back to work this week.” It has some bad plays, especially the first one. But looking at the tape, there’s nothing there, it’s very similar to training, which we do every week.” Shanahan usually takes a glass-half-full approach to most of his team’s mistakes, especially this one.
Purdy struggled mightily against the Ravens and was uncomfortable in the pocket throughout. But his coach feels it wasn’t the moments he made mistakes that defined his day, but how he reacted afterwards. Only three of the 49ers’ 11 drives in Week 16 produced points.
Yes, the burden is not just on Brock Purdy. But for a QB who has been so consistent throughout his NFL career, Monday night was a little eye-opening that he could be upset. “I thought the biggest thing for Brock was how the first half went. I thought Brock and I talked about where he thought he struggled the most after four picks,” Shanahan explained. “I thought his first choice was bad. mistake.
” I thought the next three were unlucky, no excuses, just tough games of football out there and they played good games of football. But it’s hard to play a lot of football when you’ve got four picks and stuff, especially when you’re up against it. this type of protection.
Despite the horror show on national television, Shanahan believes Purdy will do better because he’s learning to deal with adversity, even if the outcome isn’t what they wanted. – I think it was the best experience for him. How to feel it, know what happened, know why it happened, and still go out and move it and play. “I think that’s the best experience you can have in the game,” Shanahan said of Purdy.
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